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Showing posts with label defense. Show all posts
Showing posts with label defense. Show all posts

Thursday, August 23, 2012

33 Big Blowout Spectacular Season Preview

This week on the show we have WackJack, aka Jack Hopkins of Bobcat Report fame and WacJack blog, Darrell of RowdyReport and of course, Adam, Shafer, and Jared.

We cover the schedule, the depth chart, Soza/Carter, expectations, attendance and much more. Get in contact with us at podcast@cokerchronicles.com or @cokerchronicles.


You can find the links to the episode on the iTunes on Stitcher or just subscribe directly to the podcast.



Talk about this post on twitter and on the Forum

Monday, December 19, 2011

Coach Hoover Link: 4-2-5 Defense


This is a treasure trove of good links that will probably take up a good weekend of reading/watching. My schedule is so packed with Things To Read that I don't know when I'll be able to get to stuff like this in the near future. If you have time you should definitely jump in and learn some 4-2-5.

Some portions can be really technical and there is a lot of coach-speak. If you can fight through that you'll get some good football knowledge.

At the very least it will help you in your NCAA 12 adventures.

Enjoy.

LINK

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Northeastern State Depth Chart

Northeastern depth chart. Click to enlarge.
Found this crawl across the @CokerChronicles twitter feed. (Side note, we're on a push to reach 100 followers AT LEAST before kick off. So follow us and pass the word along.) Northeastern State has released game notes and an official depth chart for the UTSA game this Saturday. Northeastern State has some pretty big receivers on their roster, but are generally small as a team. Let's take some comparisons to our own squad.
Click to enlarge.
While there are a couple of haus on this offensive line (6'6, 270 lbs at left tackle!), it's fairly small across the board when you take the pathetic right side into account. 6'2, 255/6'0 255 is too small for 5A high school football in Texas. In fact I'm pretty sure Brandeis High's average size on the offensive line  is considerably larger. I'd imagine that NSU favors running behind the side of the line where they have size. This will allow Neathery to key in on those running lanes by blitzing a mix of Johnston and Kurfehs. Ben Beam is a monster  at 335 pounds. Obviously interior pass rushes are going to be affected by Beam's presence-- ways to play around Beam's size? A.) Loop a defensive end around through the middle to catch Beam off guard and counter his size with superior quickness. B.) Blitz a safety through the middle C.) Simply beat Beam with your first step and get into the backfield before he can get his honey hams on to you.

Click to enlarge. Yes, I know there are 12 offensive players. I didn't make the depth chart.
Feeling pretty good about the match ups here. We have our biggest lineman (Harris) on NSU's best defensive lineman (Boswell). Dirteater  is criminally small. Watch for Johnson and Glasco to pound the ball through Dirteater's running lane. Even if Dirteater manages to get through Inskeep, who has 5 inches in height and 50 pounds of weight in his favor, Dirteater is small enough that our running backs could lower their shoulders and plow through the line until they're met by linebackers. Noseguard  Te'O has good size at 6'1, 285 lbs, almost a particle-by-particle mirror of his match up, Nate Leonard. I'm going to guess that Te'O lines up as a 1 shade on the weak side since NSU only listed four defensive linemen on their depth chart. A 1-5 technique gap is quite large for the college game. If I'm Coach Bush, I come out in a pro style set, kick down on Te'O with the OG, let Leonard go after the middle backer or pull to double team the end, then throw Okotcha on the outside linebacker as a lead blocker. Speaking of which, NSU is pretty light at both outside linebacker spots. If Bush and co. are unable to establish the running game, they can easily switch or motion to a 4 WR set to pull out one of the Riverhawk's linebackers. A slot reverse with Armstrong could be killer if NSU bites on that. Pretty good size at free and strong safety for NSU. Might be tough to land corner routes against the height of Leach and Keenum.

Overall, I'm pretty encouraged by seeing this depth chart. As we all know, football is so much more than a game of size, but NSU has some pretty glaring holes that UTSA should be able to exploit. With the speed and athleticism on this young Roadrunner squad a couple of mismatches in the trenches could go a long way towards a UTSA inaugural victory. Speaking of which, tweet us your score predictions. Whoever is closest might just win a prize.

Four days until kick off.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Neathery's 4-2-5 Defense

Neal Neathery is the defensive coordinator. His preference for scheme is the 4-2-5. You know it. TCU runs it and their success has rustled up plenty of interest in it.

So what is it?

Well first it is more than just a formation. It isn’t a nickel package. Ideally, instead of having four defensive backs (two safeties and two corners) and three linebackers you have two corners two strong safeties, a free safety and two Super Strong Safeties.

Base defense. But you knew that.


The system is about speed and versatility. Guys who would play linebackers play end at TCU. Guys who would play safety play linebacker. Guys who play corner can hit and tackle.

Like spread offenses, the 4-2-5 is designed to level the playing field and put the defense in the best positions to complete (and not get obliterated by bigger, stronger, faster teams).

Let the master himself tell it:

We must establish the 8 man front and use the multiplicity of that to our advantage.
The reason for using the eight man front is that we believe you must stop the run first. If you can’t do that, nothing else matters. The 4-2-5 front allows us the multiplicity to always try to have one more player at the point of attack than the offense.

That multiplicity and versatility allows the defense to establish leverage on the run. The safeties act as third linebackers (or fourth if needed).

The biggest worry when relying so much on speed and leverage is just getting plain run over. Here is how that is done.

People new to the idea of using a 5 man secondary are skeptical, because it seems like it would be difficult to stop a power running team that uses bigger personnel. At times being smaller can put the D at a disadvantage, however, with proper game-planning and practice the 4-2-5 can become an excellent defense for stopping the power run.

By far my favorite aspect of the defense is the ability to surprise. TCU calls it an attacking defense. You have to be. You are the smaller team with less powerful athletes. You must strike first and use your strengths (er- well, speed).

Remember that TCU-Wisconsin Rose Bowl? Remember the game winning pass deflection? Sure you do. That is the boring part. The good part? Exotic blitzing.

Patterson talks some about the importance of the blitz in the minds of the opponent. “The threat of the blitz to an offense is oftentimes worse than the blitz itself.”

A well-coached 4-2-5 is deadly. The natural angles created can cause plenty of headaches for even the most disciplined offense. In the end though, a scheme is only as good as its execution. UTSA is rolling out a ton of freshman and sophomores with no experience playing a college football game. It is somewhat unrealistic to expect a dominant force from Neathery against Northeastern, or really, at all in 2011.

That said, it is an good defense to have for a non-BCS school. Instead of relying on 4 and 5 star behemoth defensive lineman to win games and get stops, you play the undersized talent that fits perfectly in your system. Speed and size are rare, but speed is slightly more common. Patterson recruits “corners that can grow into safeties and safeties that can grow into linebackers.”

The finished product (as finished as a college squad can be) will be a fast --if slightly undersized--nightmare that wreaks havoc. It will be the defense that allows UTSA to pull off something like TCU did back when it beat Oklahoma in Norman, gave Texas a run for their money and shut down Mike Leach’s prolific Texas Tech squad at Among G. Carter.

Caveats

Though Neathery comes with an impressive resume (and DVDs) he is not Gary Patterson. That’s not meant to sound negative. Gary Patterson’s success comes from the ability of the TCU staff to identify players that can thrive in his system and then teach them how to do that. Without those two facets, we are left with a lot of pretty scribbles on the whiteboard and a lopsided score on the field.


Here is more on the basics of the defense from a Clemson blog.